Carlos Alcaraz Stuns Jannik Sinner in Paris; Goes Back to Back at French Open

PARIS — Carlos Alcaraz turned Roland Garros into his personal playground, clawing back from two sets down to beat Jannik Sinner in a five-set, 5-hour-29-minute marathon, defending his French Open crown. The 22-year-old Spaniard’s 4-6, 6-7 (4-7), 6-4, 7-6 (7-3), 7-6 (10-2) victory was the longest men’s final in tournament history, a sweaty, gritty masterpiece that had fans losing their minds.

Sinner, the world No. 1, came out swinging, snagging the first two sets with 47 winners and a serve that hit like a freight train. Alcaraz, though, flipped the script in the third, breaking Sinner’s serve to win 6-4 as the crowd roared him on. Down 3-5, 0-40 in the fourth, facing three championship points, Alcaraz didn’t blink. He battled back, won the tiebreak, and pushed it to a fifth set. Sinner, visibly gassed after his three-month doping ban layoff, broke back at 5-5, but Alcaraz owned the final tiebreak, sealing it with a screaming forehand.

Alcaraz’s 56 winners and 5-of-12 break point conversions outshone Sinner’s 4-of-8. The Spaniard’s 13-1 record in five-setters now glitters, while Sinner’s 0-7 in matches over four hours stings. This win, Alcaraz’s fifth Grand Slam and second at Roland Garros, cements his 8-4 head-to-head edge over Sinner. The Italian’s 31-set Grand Slam streak ended, but his fight was undeniable.

Fans on X called it the greatest final ever, and it’s hard to argue. Alcaraz, now 5-0 in major finals, danced on the clay, while Sinner trudged off, plotting revenge. Wimbledon looms, and this rivalry’s just getting started. Tennis hasn’t been this electric in years, since the ‘big three’ did battle.

What a week for sports comebacks.

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